13
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
revelette1
 
  3  
Reply Sun 23 Apr, 2023 08:30 am
@Real Music,
Well, I admit I get upset about the qualities you mentioned, so it's not good for me either.
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 23 Apr, 2023 11:26 am
@revelette1,
I've been buying incredibly good Feta from Bulgaria at a decent enough price, considering that I live in Marble Falls where they think brine is a bad thing and pre-crumbled Feta is wonderful.

Unfortunately I have to use Amazon to get it. I wish I knew of a local produce of a Feta-like good cheese.
Real Music
 
  4  
Reply Sun 23 Apr, 2023 11:41 am
@revelette1,
1. I seriously doubt that anyone of us is under any disillusions of Lash's true purpose or agenda.

2. I suspect that everyone can see right through Lash's shenanigans.

3. There is no rational reason to get upset with Lash's shenanigans.

4. I would recommend that you (not) respond to Lash that (frequently).

5. Pick and select your moments to respond to Lash's postings.

6. Lastly, when you do respond to Lash, embrace the entertainment value of (debunking) her claims.

7. Embrace the entertainment value of (exposing) her true purpose and true agenda.

8. There is nothing upsetting about (debunking) Lash's misleading and deceptive claims.

9. There is nothing upsetting about (exposing) Lash's true purpose and agenda.

10. It's actually entertaining. Smile
0 Replies
 
thack45
 
  2  
Reply Sun 23 Apr, 2023 12:45 pm
@hightor,
hightor wrote:

The Gospel of Candace Owens

The Daily Wire host is waging a far-right fight for the soul of pop culture.

There appears to be a striking amount of overlap of grievances between fighting for the soul of pop culture and the righwing's same old culture war fights. But she is a millennial who's wholly fluent in shitpost, "gets" TikTok and knows who Lizzo is, so it's probably totally different. I'm just a pansy-ass socialist who's so full of hate that I never could discern any difference once they won their battles against the war on Christmas and indoctrination of young people via CRT.
0 Replies
 
thack45
 
  2  
Reply Sun 23 Apr, 2023 01:41 pm
Take heart folks. Only two Mother's Days and 6 months left to go!

38 percent in new poll say they feel ‘exhaustion’ over prospect of rematch between Biden, Trump
0 Replies
 
Below viewing threshold (view)
revelette1
 
  2  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 07:57 am
@bobsal u1553115,
I know what you mean by living in area where it's hard to find good quality foods. But meat on the other hand is always easy to get. I thought this new butcher shop that just opened in a country road near me might also have good cheese, they advertise it, but, no, it's processed. Most recipes call for unprocessed cheese you shred yourself.
0 Replies
 
Rebelofnj
 
  4  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 09:50 am
Tucker Carlson Out At Fox News, Network Says They Have “Agreed To Part Ways”
Quote:
“Mr. Carlson’s last program was Friday April 21st. Fox News Tonight will air live at 8 PM/ET starting this evening as an interim show helmed by rotating Fox News personalities until a new host is named,” the network announced.

https://deadline.com/2023/04/tucker-carlson-out-at-fox-news-1235334983/

This departure I wasn't expecting in the Dominion settlement aftermath. Though I do now expect him to join Trump’s campaign team in the next couple of days.
blatham
 
  3  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 10:37 am
@Rebelofnj,
That IS a surprise. Apparently Rupert and son decided for PR purposes that they had to knock off their big boy. Or there are further legal liabilities which his removal will help them with.

About a year ago, Eric Alterman (who has known Tucker for years and with whom he once had many relatively rational debates in the distant past) was asked what had happened to Carlson in this recent period. Alterman said he didn't know but said it might be political ambitions.

Two immediate questions: what does Fox do going forward / what does Carlson do going forward?
0 Replies
 
revelette1
 
  3  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 10:40 am
@Rebelofnj,
Wow, I bet fox viewers won't be pleased.
Rebelofnj
 
  3  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 10:56 am
@Rebelofnj,
Also, Don Lemon was fired from CNN, shortly after allegations about him were published.
Quote:
A Variety report published April 5 alleged that Lemon has a long history of questionable behavior toward women.

The report was based on more than a dozen former and current colleagues, Variety said, who described Lemon as openly hostile to women at the network. Most of the sources spoke anonymously to the outlet.


https://www.nbcnews.com/media/don-lemon-says-fired-cnn-rcna78349

Really strange timing, given the Carlson ousting happened minutes before Lemon's announcement.
Region Philbis
 
  5  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 11:32 am
@Rebelofnj,

a very odd way to compete for ratings...
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  3  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 11:33 am
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FufqJloagAI4_xG?format=jpg&name=900x900
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  4  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 11:36 am
@revelette1,
Quote:
Wow, I bet fox viewers won't be pleased.

That is an interesting dynamic and one I'll be watching attentively.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  3  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 11:39 am
Fox was still running promos this morning for his planned show tonight.
hightor
 
  4  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 12:12 pm
Republicans Are Playing Into the Hands of Putin and Xi

somebody wrote:
Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy is making a ransom demand. His hostage is the economy and America’s credibility. Mr. McCarthy has threatened that House Republicans will refuse to raise the federal government’s debt ceiling, potentially triggering a global financial crisis, unless President Biden agrees to deep cuts to education, health care, food assistance for poor children and other services.

Mr. McCarthy repeatedly invoked the threat of Chinese competition as justification. The speaker is right that this debate has significant national security implications — just not the way he says.

With Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine grinding into a second year, tensions with China continuing to rise and global threats looming, from future pandemics to climate change, the world is looking to the United States for strong, steady leadership. Congressional brinkmanship on the debt ceiling sends the opposite message to our allies and our adversaries: that America is divided, distracted and can’t be counted on.

Let’s start by dispelling a myth. The debt ceiling debate is not about authorizing new spending. It’s about Congress paying debts it has already incurred. Refusing to pay would be like skipping out on your mortgage, except with global consequences. Because of the central role of the United States — and the dollar — in the international economy, defaulting on our debts could spark a worldwide financial meltdown.

Republicans in Congress have consistently voted to raise the debt ceiling with little drama when a fellow Republican is in the White House — including three times under President Donald Trump. But during Democratic administrations, they have weaponized the debt ceiling to extort concessions, despite the danger of default.

I was secretary of state during the debt ceiling crisis of 2011, so I saw firsthand how this partisan posturing damaged our nation’s credibility around the world.

I vividly remember walking into a Hong Kong ballroom that July for a conference organized by the local American Chamber of Commerce. Congressional Republicans were refusing to raise the debt ceiling, and the prospect of a default was getting closer by the day. I was swarmed by nervous businessmen from across Asia. They peppered me with questions about the fight back home over the debt ceiling and what it would mean for the international economy. The regional and global stability that America had guaranteed for decades was the foundation on which they had built companies and fortunes. But could they still trust the United States? Were we really going to spark another worldwide financial crisis? And the question that no one wanted to say out loud: If America faltered, would China swoop in to fill the vacuum?

I tried to reassure those businessmen the same way I did when I spoke with anxious foreign diplomats throughout that summer, confidently promising that Congress would eventually reach a deal. I repeated a quip sometimes apocryphally attributed to Winston Churchill: You can always count on Americans to do the right thing, after they’ve tried everything else. Privately, I crossed my fingers and hoped it was true.

Later that day, I headed to a villa in mainland China for a meeting with my counterpart, State Councilor Dai Bingguo. Over the years, I had heard monologues from Mr. Dai about America’s many supposed misdeeds, his criticisms at times bitingly sardonic but usually delivered with a smile. So I was not surprised when he, too, turned the conversation to the debt ceiling, barely containing his glee at our self-inflicted wound. I was not in the mood for lectures. “We could spend the next six hours talking about China’s domestic challenges,” I told Mr. Dai.

Fortunately, Congress and President Barack Obama finally reached an agreement to raise the debt ceiling before careening into the fiscal abyss. But the S & P still fell 17 percent, consumer and business confidence nose-dived, and the government’s credit rating was downgraded for the first time ever. After another crisis in 2013, the lesson was clear: Negotiating with hostage-takers will only embolden them to do it again.

Fast forward a dozen years, and Republicans are playing the same game. Except now, the risks are even higher.

Today the competition between democracies and autocracies has grown more intense. And by undermining America’s credibility and the pre-eminence of the dollar, the fight over the debt ceiling plays right into the hands of Xi Jinping of China and Vladimir Putin of Russia.

America’s leadership around the world depends on our economic strength at home. Defaulting on our debts could cost the United States seven million jobs and throw our economy into a deep recession. Instead of the “arsenal of democracy” capable of outcompeting our rivals, dominating the industries of the future such as microchips and clean energy and modernizing our military, America would be hobbled.

Even setting aside this economic carnage, brinkmanship over the debt ceiling reinforces autocrats’ narrative that American democracy is in terminal decline and can’t be trusted.

Trust matters in international affairs. We frequently ask other nations to put their faith in the United States. Our military will be there to protect allies, our financial system is secure, and when we warn about compromised Chinese telecom equipment or an impending Russian invasion, we’re telling the truth. Threatening to break America’s promise to pay our debts calls all that into question.

When I was secretary of state, a big part of my job was rebuilding confidence in the United States after the George W. Bush administration. It wasn’t easy. Senior Chinese officials rarely missed an opportunity to argue that the United States was to blame for the 2008 global financial crisis, and they enjoyed highlighting our troubles in Iraq and Afghanistan. The more dysfunctional or untrustworthy America looked, the easier it was for Chinese propagandists to bad-mouth democracy and brag about their own authoritarian system.

Today America’s credibility will help determine whether nervous Europeans continue to stand with us and support Ukraine or seek an accommodation with an emboldened Russia. It could determine whether more Asian nations welcome American military bases and troops to deter Chinese aggression, as the Philippines recently did, or buckle to Beijing’s bullying.

There’s more. Playing games with the debt ceiling imperils the dollar’s pre-eminent position in the global economy and the power that gives the United States.

All over the world, people, companies and governments conduct international transactions in dollars, invest in U.S. Treasury bonds and rely on U.S. banks because they trust that America pays its debts, upholds the rule of law and guarantees stability. The centrality of the dollar gives the United States far-reaching influence. It allows us to impose crippling sanctions, like those I negotiated against Iran during the Obama administration and those the Biden administration has used to respond to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. This is why Fareed Zakaria recently declared in a Washington Post op-ed that “the dollar is America’s superpower.”

It’s no surprise that Mr. Xi and Mr. Putin are eager to disrupt the dollar’s dominance and defang American sanctions. At their recent summit in Moscow, Mr. Putin suggested Russia may start selling oil around the world using Chinese yuan rather than dollars, which it is already doing for shipments to China. The two countries are also trying to build cross-border financial systems to allow them to bypass U.S. banks and are holding fewer reserves in dollars.

If Congress keeps flirting with default, calls for dethroning the dollar as the world’s reserve currency will grow much louder — and not just in Beijing and Moscow. Countries all over the world will start hedging their bets.

It’s a sad irony that Mr. McCarthy and many of the same congressional Republicans seemingly intent on sabotaging America’s global leadership by refusing to pay our debts are also positioning themselves as tougher-than-thou China hawks. They talk a good game about standing up to Beijing, yet they are handing a major win to the Chinese Communist Party.

Republicans should stop holding America’s credit hostage, shoulder their responsibilities as leaders and raise the debt ceiling.

source

bobsal u1553115
 
  4  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 01:29 pm
@blatham,
Bwaaaaaaa - hahahahahahahaha!!!

https://i.imgur.com/VoznESe.png
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  4  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 02:27 pm
@hightor,
Quote:
With Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine grinding into a second year, tensions with China continuing to rise and global threats looming, from future pandemics to climate change, the world is looking to the United States for strong, steady leadership. Congressional brinkmanship on the debt ceiling sends the opposite message to our allies and our adversaries: that America is divided, distracted and can’t be counted on.


Setting aside some questionable assumptions underlaying the passage in red, the portion I've bolded is far more solid. I think there's no question that Russia's and China's (and some other nation's) moves to weaken the US through causing internal dissention in America aligns with moves made over the last half century by movement conservatives who have now essentially taken over the GOP. This alignment can be true regardless of differing motivations.

Aside from the desire of the small and powerless paleo-conservative branch in the party who have wished to isolate America from much involvement in world affairs, the modern GOP has (particularly since the fall of the Soviet Union) concentrated almost all of its rhetorical and organizational efforts towards identifying the real enemy as internal, specifically by placing liberalism as the great danger to America's well being. Of course, this shift was eagerly joined by the increasingly powerful religious right which saw the teaching of evolution, the removal of Ten Commandments posters and prayer from schools along with the rise of feminist and gay rights as anti-God and as driven by internal agents whom they were righteously bound to contest and defeat.

These dynamics were grasped by Limbaugh and all the subsequent right wing media entities, not least of them being Murdoch. And as it turned out, there was a LOT of money to be made reifying those notions of the internal enemy. That is, by fomenting discord and setting parts of the population against other parts of the population.

It's in this sense that the modern GOP and Russia/China etc are very tightly aligned. And it is a key reason why the US is now so crippled in confronting and dealing with the larger problems such as climate change.


hightor
 
  3  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 02:55 pm
@blatham,
Yup...the passage in red is vintage HRC but the realpolitik has validity.


I listened to this today:

How insecurity contributes to disenchantment with democracy

People the world over are feeling economically and culturally insecure. Economist Pranab Bardhan says liberal leaders aren’t paying enough attention to that, and that’s led to a growing disenchantment with democracy.

• The power of populism: Populism in the world's largest democracy
• Biden wants to reshape the economy by investing in America, not unlike Trump
• The state of democracy in Latin America
• The power of populism: Its global reach, authoritarian danger and democratic promise

https://www.wbur.org/radio/programs/onpoint
blatham
 
  3  
Reply Mon 24 Apr, 2023 04:59 pm
@hightor,
Quote:
the passage in red is vintage HRC but the realpolitik has validity.

I think so as well. America has an essential role here and it's the key reason I don't want America to keep getting batshit crazy. I just wanted to set that aside so folks wouldn't go swerving over to rants about peripheral matters like the neo-conservative project.
0 Replies
 
 

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